Out of prison less than a month, a 19-year-old Jersey City man has been charged with shooting one man five times and a second man once on Saturday, officials said.

Deandre Thomas of Ocean Avenue was informed his bail is set at $500,000 cash or bond when he made his first court appearance yesterday on the charges stemming from the 11:30 p.m. shootings in the Booker T. Washington housing complex.

He is charged with attempted murder, two counts of aggravated assault, armed robbery in connection with a third victim, and numerous weapons offenses, including possession of a firearm by a felon, the criminal complaints say.

Thomas was in state prison from May 7, 2009 to April 30, 2012 for two counts of aggravated assault committed when he was 15 years old, corrections records say.

In Saturday’s shooting, the criminal complaint says, a 23-year-old Newark man was shot in the neck, chin, right side, back and twice in the left side, and a 25-year-old Jersey City man was shot once in the upper left chest.

Both victims were listed in stable condition after the shootings, police said

The Newark man told police he had been shot outside and was unable to provide more information, according to reports. The Jersey City man told police he was talking to someone near the basketball court when he was shot by someone he didn’t see, reports said.

The Jersey City man’s sister told cops she was sitting at her kitchen table when she heard about six gunshots, and when she looked outside she saw three men carrying silver handguns running from the scene, reports said.

Thomas was identified through the statement of a witness and the statement was corroborated by security video recovered by police, police reports said.

Thomas is also charged with the armed robbery of a third man, who was relieved of a wallet containing $60, the complaint says.

The warrant for Thomas’ arrest was issued Tuesday. He made his first court appearance on the charges yesterday in Central Judicial Processing court in Jersey City via video link from Hudson County jail.